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When the Customer is God of Fortune. Three Hawker Success Stories from Singapore, Malaysia & Taiwan

When the Customer is God of Fortune. Three Success Hawker Stories from Singapore, Malaysia & Taiwan
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Through the years of chatting with many hawkers, I enjoyed the privilege of hearing many interesting stories they shared. One of the things that struck me was how sometimes, just one honest comment from a customer can change the fortunes of food stalls or restaurants. During blogging, I came across a few and these are just three at top of my mind. (If you have other success stories, please share them with us.)

Sometimes, God of Fortune visits hawkers disguised as a picky customer ๐Ÿ˜„

Song-Fish-Head-Seng-Kee-Chinatown-Complex-Food-Centre

"Chicken Boy" used to serve old school Cantonese steam song fish head with fermented bean paste or ginger sauce at his stall Seng Kee in Singapore's Chinatown. Every steam song fish head shop was serving the dish the same old way, from Guangzhou to Hong Kong, Malaysia and Singapore.

Then one day, a regular customer of "Chicken Boy" commented that it's getting boring with just these same few traditional sauces... "can you come up with something different?"

Song-Fish-Head-Seng-Kee-Chinatown-Complex-Food-Centre

This got Chicken Boy thinking. He went to work on the sauce and came up with a Thai inspired "hot sauce". The savoury spicy hot sauce was an instant hit, well received by customers. The hot sauce quickly outsold the traditional old school sauces and Chicken Boy's Seng Kee stall became the top song fish head stall in Chinatown.

Seng Kee's pioneering savoury spicy hot sauce was quickly copied by many other shops but the "Chicken Boy" original is still the best to me lah.



Hin Hock Bak Kut Teh in Johor Bahru - Chinese Liquorice

If you go to Hin Hock Bak Kut Teh in Johor Bahru now, you may think that it is a steamed fish shop because you will see fish on almost every table. Ah Hock founded Hin Hock Bak Kut Teh to sell BKT. Business was okay, some people like Ah Hock's herbal bak kut teh stock which has a strong Chinese liquorice taste. But, not that many. Not me also ๐Ÿ˜ฌ

One day, one of Ah Hock's regulars suggested "why don't you also sell fish?"

Hin Hock Bak Kut Teh in Johor Bahru - Chinese Liquorice

Ah Hock got to work and developed his unique fish dish where the fresh fish is cooked by dunking it in boiling water (instead of steaming). The boiled fish is served with lots of sloshy savoury sauce and smothered with a thick golden brown blanket of fried garlic bits and chopped spring onion.

Steamed-Fish-Johor-Bahru

Ah Hock's boiled fish was a huge success. Ah Hock still sells his bak kut teh (he is proud of it) but you can be forgiven for thinking that Hin Hock BKT is a fish shop. The booming restaurant is always packed to the rafters during lunch for Ah Hock's famous boiled fish.

More Hin Hock Bak Kut Teh's poached fish ๐Ÿ‘ˆ click



When ๆž—่‹ฑ่Šณ opened Ching Cheng Hainanese Chicken Rice stall in Taipei, he served his tender poached chicken with Thai style spicy sour hot sauce as he learnt how to make chicken rice in Bangkok. Business wasn't good as locals weren't accustomed to the spicy hot Thai sauce.

Then one day, a customer said to ๆž—่‹ฑ่Šณ "why don't you serve your chicken with Cantonese spring onion and ginger sauce?"

ๆž—่‹ฑ่Šณ took the feedback seriously and set about developing his own spring onion and ginger sauce. When ๆž—่‹ฑ่Šณ served his chicken with his hand made spring onion and ginger sauce, his fortunes turned around completely. Customers liked his sauce so much that his signature spring onion and ginger sauce became the soul of his chicken rice dish. Now, queues form before the stall opens and ๆž—่‹ฑ่Šณ sells more than 1,000 servings a day.

More on Singapore Seng Kee's story ๐Ÿ‘ˆ
More on Johor Bahru Hin Hock's story ๐Ÿ‘ˆ
More on Taipei Ching Cheng's story ๐Ÿ‘ˆ

What do you think about constructive customer feedback? Please share similar success stories with us. Thank you ๐ŸคŸ


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Written by Tony Boey on 5 Jul 2019

1 comment:

  1. Thanks for sharing these feel good stories. I think customers' feedback should always be taken seriously as they have been around, and eaten at many places already, so they know what's good, what's not, or how to stand out. Kudos to these hawkers for taking on the challenge to step out of their comfort zone.

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